Priest accused of
murder and torture
Rev. Christian Von Wernich
is accused of complicity with the torture and murder of scores of
fellow Argentines during a military dictatorship of the 1970s. Argentine
president said the priest had "dishonored" the Church.
A priest and former chaplain of Argentina's
police forces was accused in court on July 5 of murders and torture
committed during that country's right-wing military dictatorship
(1976-1983). Christian Von Wernich is accused of participation
in seven homicides, 31 cases of torture and 42 abductions at
five different detention centers in the Buenos Aires area. Appearing
at the Federal Oral Tribunal in the coastal city of La Plata,
some 45 miles from the nation's capital, the priest appears to
be the first such cleric in Latin America to be tried for human
rights violations, according to journalist Hernán Brienza - author of the book "Maldito
eres tú (You're damned): the Von Wernich case, the Church
and illegal repression".
Argentine president Nestor Kirchner said in
a statement in La Plata that this was an historic moment for
Argentina as a priest who had dishonored the Church, afflicted
the poor and violated human rights is being brought to justice.
Von Wernich appeared in court as a graying older man, wearing
a bulletproof vest over his clerical shirt and Roman collar.
The prosecutor in the case accused Von Wernich of "primary complicity" in
torture and murders, having had direct contact with those detained
in the Argentine dictatorship's many detention centers. In the
city of Buenos Aires and the surrounding province of Buenos Aires,
Von Wernich is accused of serving during the time when the feared
General Ramon Camps had control of police and military facilities
- such as the infamous Naval College - where scores of victims,
including pregnant women, were detained, tortured, and killed
at the hands of security forces.
In relation to the Von Wernich case, journalist
and author Horacio Verbitsky - a frequent critic of the Catholic
Church - told AFP that the paradox of the Church in Latin America
during the 1970s was that even while many of the clergy supported
right-wing dictatorships, there were many murders of priests
and bishops and laity by the right-wing. For example, the current
cardinal of Buenos Aires, Jorge Bergoglio, has been accused by
human rights investigators of "sinister complicity" in
right-wing repression of the 1970s and early 1980s. The political
and military leaders of that regime, such as General Leopoldo
Galtieri, have been brought to book; until now, clerics had been
apparently immune.
http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=10200
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